Donald Trump’s election did not squelch differences of opinion on who should be part of his administration, including the top names on his White House staff. Plus, Should Trump include Democrats in his administration?

For the historic opportunity Trump and the Republican Party have been given by his stunning and unanticipated victory of November 8 will not last long. His adversaries and enemies in politics and press are only temporarily dazed and reeling. This great opening should be exploited now.

Trump brought his ideas to the campaign along with attributes perfectly suited for America’s new era of politics. Shall we call it the New Politics of 2016? The progressive left was bankrupt. It was delusional. It lived in the past. Donald could bring the talents of a successful builder and entrepreneur to government. He lived in the world of finance and of entertainment. We have an entertainment culture, and now he would make politics entertaining.

No one should expect an outbreak of humility in the ranks. The giants of the media still have bitter lessons to learn, and “the less educated and non-educated whites” will continue to grade on a sharp curve.

Having an alternative view doesn't make someone "dumb," and dismissing those without a college degree who voted for Trump as such is precisely part of what motivated them to vote for Trump in the first place.

It would advance political journalism if some of its practitioners were able to acquire a more detailed understanding of the art (science it never was and can never be) of public opinion polling. If they had actually achieved some working sophistication, adepts like Chris Matthews would not so readily turn from awarding pleasure credits (“I felt this thrill going up my leg” while contemplating Obama) to exhorting vigilante justice as he urged, late on election night, that “we should tar and feather all of the pollsters.”

It is a time to be daring and innovative, to consider what policies will turn around the deterioration of the last dozen years, and to divest ourselves of the dead weight of failed ideologies. Hard work lies ahead of us. Let us devote ourselves to it without distraction.

To ensure the peaceful transfer of power Republicans must do only the most limited continuing resolution necessary to fund the government until President-elect Trump takes office, and if necessary, keep Congress in pro forma session to ensure no eleventh-hour mischief from Obama.

A Trump loss would not only be devastating for rule of law and national security; it would also leave the base and the Beltway progressives of the GOP staring at each other with little in common but another lost election that should have been a Republican landslide. Then it’s a matter of time before the topic of divorce comes up.

The point is, we’d all likelier be happy if the vote-seekers would just let us alone most of the time: Leave us to find our ways through life’s tangles with the help of family and friends and community. Jefferson’s arguments for small, non-intrusive government have never, it seems to me, seemed more trenchant.

The bottom line is, over many long months, the political system occasionally lost its collective head over Trump, imagining all sorts of wild scenarios. No matter who wins on election night, that seems unlikely to change.

By Richard A. Viguerie, CHQ ChairmanNo one knows what happens when you enter the voting booth to cast your ballot – but we all know what will happen if Hillary Clinton is elected president because a few thousand alleged conservatives in key states did not vote for the Trump – Pence ticket.

We found in Donald Trump’s closing argument a glimmer of hope for the restoration of our country and the real change we’ve been campaigning for: My message is that things have to change and they have to change right now. Every day I wake up determined to deliver a better life for the people all across this nation that had been ignored, neglected and abandoned.

Moral laziness is not what we need in these final hours. Are you willing to put others before your own reputation, your own fears of how you will be judged in the future? If you haven’t voted yet, I urge you to contemplate that question with the seriousness and sobriety it deserves.

This may be the last year that a Republican will be elected president, as the growth of liberal-leaning minorities all but guarantees that Democrats will hold the majority at least for the next four decades. That's according to an unusual survey on the impact of minorities, mostly Latin American, done for WalletHub.

If Hillary Clinton is elected president, Democrats will continue to be corrupted by the political imperative to protect their president. It’s time to free America, and the Democratic Party, from the culture of Hillary Clinton’s lies and corruption and get honest government back for all Americans.

In a state hard-hit by unemployment caused by globalization importing thousands of unemployable or low-skilled “refugees” makes no sense to voters, who are looking for someone to champion their economic and cultural interests. Hillary Clinton has clearly put herself on the other side of that battle and that is a major reason why Donald Trump is surging in Michigan.

If Hillary Clinton is elected president on Tuesday, and if what Bret Baier is reporting from FBI sources on Fox News is true, America is headed for a constitutional crisis. Indeed, it would seem imperative that FBI Director James Comey, even if it violates protocol and costs him his job, state publicly whether what Baier’s FBI sources are telling him is false or true. The people have a right to know—before Tuesday.

When this election is over there will be three kinds of people left in America – those who worked to save their country and defend constitutional liberty by defeating Hillary Clinton, those who worked to destroy this country by electing Hillary Clinton to continue Barack Obama’s subversive far Left agenda, and those sorry souls who stood by and did nothing while the future of their country and constitutional liberty hung in the balance.